This site was created in an effort to connect people who want answers about animal mutilations worldwide. Investigators, researchers, scientists, and the public are invited to participate. We take reports of animal mutilations and investigate them. If you have an event to report please send it to Margie Kay at margiekay06@yahoo.com.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Mutilations: Aliens? The Pueblo Chieftain, Pueblo, Colorado

TRINIDAD — At first, rancher Tom Miller thought the savagery wrought on his cattle was a cruel joke. Mutilated cows and calfs. Field-dressed and missing ears, organs and eyes. Carcasses devoid of blood.

A second-generation rancher, it wasn’t until 1999 that Miller said he
started looking at the animal deaths differently, not as the product of
twisted mischief or the feeding scraps of predators.
“At first I thought it was a prank, but there were no tracks, no
blood. It looks like the carcass is pealed off, and it happens
overnight,” Miller said.

“There are just so many things that happen that doesn’t seem like
it’s human. I know people think you’re crazy, but there are so many
things people can’t explain.”
Since ‘99, six cows and calfs have been mutilated on Miller’s ranch
northeast of here. Two calfs were mutilated in May and the day after
meeting with a Chieftain reporter and photographer this week, he found
another mutilated cow on his property.

Miller thinks the seventh death happened in the last week.

Chuck Zukowski has been investigating UFO sightings, paranormal cases
and animal mutilations throughout the United States for 28 years.

A California native who lives in Colorado Springs where he makes his
living designing microchips, Zukowski has investigated at least 24
mutilation cases in Trinidad and Southern Colorado. In his cases, he’s found little evidence to suggest human intervention or natural predators.
“You don’t see any predator markings at all — bite marks, claw marks —
and if you did, it would be a clear giveaway,” Zukowski, a former
volunteer sheriff’s deputy said. “I don’t see blood stains on the hides,
which is ridiculous. Completely devoid of blood. Why would an animal
carve and cut a perfectly round circle on one side of a head? Why would a
scavenger do that? The lack of blood, unusual cuts, and there’s no
human evidence there — no foot prints, no tire marks.”

Not everyone subscribes to the thought of extraterrestrial life. For
some ranchers in the San Luis Valley they believe the deaths to be the
work of the blood-thirsty “Chupacabra,” a creature of Hispanic lore that
preys on livestock.

Zukowski said some ranchers have seen black military helicopters hover over their cattle and later find a mutilated carcass.

Some may think Satanic cults are to blame, or such was the case in
some of the earliest publicized mutilation cases in the ‘60s and ‘70s.

Whatever the thought or theory, mutilations continue to happen and
the culprit(s) remain at large. And Zukowski, who volunteers his time to
investigate, has linked commonalities that he says points to aliens.

“I believe, without a doubt, that there is life outside of the
planet,” he said, adding that the mutilators are “a highly intelligent
predator.”

“In the cases I investigate, there’s no signs the animal struggled.
In some cases, it looks like (the animal) was dropped there,” said
Zukowski, whose investigations can be found on his website, UFOnut.com

He’s found animals inside a depressed ring and in one out-of-state case, found a mutilated animal inside a fresh crop circle.

Zukowski collects soil both inside and out of the rings and has the samples tested at Colorado State University-Fort Collins.

“I’m seeing some kind of nutrients being altered in the soil. The
soil inside the depressions are less soluble than outside the ring.”

In one of the May cases at Miller’s ranch, Zukowski said he picked up
high radiation readings around a carcass found beside a tree.

Above the carcass, Zukowski said, he found broken limbs in the tree, which leads him to think the animal was dropped from above.

“I had some unusual radiation readings in a field at Tom Miller’s
place, and you could see where branches were broken where the carcass
was found,” he said.

While some ranchers may be scared, Miller said he’s not, only more
concerned for his herd. Years of drought have taken a toll and, looking
down at the remains of a mutilated calf, he says: “That could’ve been
$800.”

After staring at the carcass for a minute, Miller looked up: “There’s just so many questions no one can answer.”

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